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El arpa birmana

Título original: Biruma no tategoto
  • 1956
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 56min
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
8,0/10
7 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
El arpa birmana (1956)
DramaMusicWar

Añade un argumento en tu idiomaA conscience-driven Japanese soldier traumatized by the events of WWII adopts the lifestyle of a Buddhist monk.A conscience-driven Japanese soldier traumatized by the events of WWII adopts the lifestyle of a Buddhist monk.A conscience-driven Japanese soldier traumatized by the events of WWII adopts the lifestyle of a Buddhist monk.

  • Dirección
    • Kon Ichikawa
  • Guión
    • Michio Takeyama
    • Natto Wada
  • Reparto principal
    • Rentarô Mikuni
    • Shôji Yasui
    • Tatsuya Mihashi
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
    8,0/10
    7 mil
    TU PUNTUACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Kon Ichikawa
    • Guión
      • Michio Takeyama
      • Natto Wada
    • Reparto principal
      • Rentarô Mikuni
      • Shôji Yasui
      • Tatsuya Mihashi
    • 58Reseñas de usuarios
    • 39Reseñas de críticos
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
    • Nominado para 1 premio Óscar
      • 4 premios y 3 nominaciones en total

    Imágenes66

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    Reparto principal33

    Editar
    Rentarô Mikuni
    Rentarô Mikuni
    • Captain Inouye
    Shôji Yasui
    Shôji Yasui
    • Mizushima
    Tatsuya Mihashi
    Tatsuya Mihashi
    • Defense Commander
    Jun Hamamura
    Jun Hamamura
    • Ito
    Taketoshi Naitô
    Taketoshi Naitô
    • Kobayashi
    • (as Takeo Naito)
    Shunji Kasuga
    • Maki
    Kô Nishimura
    Kô Nishimura
    • Baba
    • (as Akira Nishimura)
    Keishichi Nakahara
    • Takagi
    Toshiaki Itô
    • Hashimoto
    Hiroshi Hijikata
    • Okada
    Tomio Aoki
    Tomio Aoki
    • Oyama
    Norikatsu Hanamura
    • Nakamura
    Sanpei Mine
    • Abe
    Takashi Koshiba
    • Shimizu
    Tomoko Tonai
    Tokuhei Miyahara
    • Nagai
    Yoshiaki Kato
    • Matsuda
    Masahiko Naruse
    • Soldier
    • Dirección
      • Kon Ichikawa
    • Guión
      • Michio Takeyama
      • Natto Wada
    • Todo el reparto y equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Reseñas de usuarios58

    8,06.9K
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    Reseñas destacadas

    gorgeaway

    You don't know how it is fighting a war, man!

    Putting history and politics aside, I found this film confronted some very human emotions involving war. No matter if this were a Japanese company of soldiers, or a British company, most war movies don't touch on ideas like you'll find here. The film follows a company of Japanese soldiers, with little or no supplies, attempting to reach the border of Thailand. The men enjoy singing wherever they go, and are quite proud of their abilities. It makes them think of their loved ones back home and gives them a sense of unity and hope. One of the men, Mizushima, plays the harp with natural talent, as he had never studied music before joining the army. There is a great scene where the Japanese see the British troops hiding in the forest, so they start to sing, tricking the British into thinking they are oblivious to them. When the British then start singing back, and both sides are singing together, it is a scene of great joy and unity between all humans. Somehow it isn't even cheesy.though it seems it could be, the way I'm writing this review. The British notify the Japanese men that the war ended three days earlier, when Japan surrendered. They are placed in a P.O.W. camp until it is possible to send them all home. The commander of the Japanese men attempts to fill his men's hearts with hope and pride, telling them that together they will rebuild Japan. They are told that nearby, a company of Japanese troops is in an ongoing skirmish with the British, unreachable and unaware of the war's end. Mizushima, is given permission to go and try to explain that Japan has surrendered, promising his company that he'll catch up in Mudon. This turns out to be a not very easy job, as the commanding officer is into the whole `I'm not giving up until I die,' philosophy. Getting nowhere, Mizushima questions their logic to try and persuade them their lives are worth saving, as Japan needs to be rebuilt. The British only agreed to a 30 minute cease fire, and when that time is up, all the Japanese men are killed. Only Mizushima crawls out alive and is found by a Buddhist monk. While he is taken care of by the monk, his company is sad and anxious for his return. Once healed, his intention is to walk to Mudon and surprise all the men, so he sets out in Buddhist costume across Burma. On his way he encounters many heaps and piles of rotting dead Japanese soldiers, and he feels it important to give them a proper burial.

    These scenes are when Mizushima fully realizes the extent of what war is all about. It's not about pride and hope, it's about putting your life on the line. He is accepted by the Buddhist church and decides to stay and live a simple life, honoring the dead through prayer and burial. His men try to persuade him using a talking parrot switcheroo, teaching a parrot to say `come home to Japan, Mizushima' and giving it to him. He, in reply, sends back his parrot, which he taught to say `no, I am staying here.' It is a pacifist sentiment throughout, a great film covering the human emotional perspective on war in a unique way.
    jandesimpson

    A Japanese elegy

    This is a film about the immediate aftermath of war from the perspective of the defeated. A Japanese company exhausted by their retreat through the Burmese jungle learn of their nation's surrender. At the request of their allied captors one of their number, Mizushima, agrees to journey to a mountain stronghold where another company is still holding out and engaging in combat. He tries to persuade his compatriots to lay down their arms and narrowly escapes death when they are massacred after refusing to give in. Appalled by the carnage around him, Mizushima decides not to return to his colleagues or country. Disguised as a Buddhist monk, he embarks on the task of laying to rest the war dead that would otherwise fall prey to the vultures. There is nothing in the way of plot beyond this. "The Burmese Harp" is that rare thing, a war film that does not rely on action. Rather does it attempt to define the innate dignity of a former aggressor attempting to salvage some sort of meaning through reparation rather than taking the comfortable course that peace can offer. Ichikawa's tender tribute to a form of saintliness sometimes totters on the tightrope of sentimentality and oversimplification - did ever weary soldiers sing more beautifully! - but by the end the message overrides all doubts. We are witnessing a proud expansionist nation coming to terms with collapse and attempting, through the powerful symbol of Mizushima, to expiate its past. Ichikawa made this film towards the end of the golden age of monochrome. that of Welles, Reed, Wyler and Ford. Like those giants he gives us wonderful closeups. "The Burmese Harp" abounds in evocative images of Burmese villagers, Buddhist monks and Japanese soldier that once seen leave an indelible impression within the mind.
    Swift-12

    Transformed

    Very poignant anti-war statement, supported with passionate music and photography. A Japanese POW at the end of the war is separated from his comrades when he tries to coax some hold-outs to surrender. After disastrous results, he disguises as a Buddhist monk and is considered dead, wandering the countryside and continually confronted with the truly dead. His friends suspect he has survived and are disconsolate unless reunited with him. But before he can rejoin them, his journey gradually and painfully transforms him. He has a new mission and a new identity, his spiritual garb no longer a mere disguise.
    8LunarPoise

    war as existential crisis

    Towards the end of WWII, a group of Japanese soldiers struggle through the chaos of national disintegration, trying to reach the border through the Burmese jungle. Their Captain is musically trained and forms them into an ad hoc male choir in order to maintain morale. Foot soldier Mizushima plays the titular instrument and as such become a talismanic figure in the group. When he later disappears and suffers an existential crisis, his fate comes to obsess the group as a whole.

    Ichikawa's iconic piece contains a strong anti-war theme that survives beyond its 1945 setting. Mizushima's troop are timeless, soldiers dreaming of homes, wives, town festivals; clinging to nostalgia to guide them home and fighting on for each other rather than any greater cause inspired by the imagined national community. Much more identifiable with the period are the troop holding out against the British even after national surrender, fanatics looking to die for an Emperor who has forsaken them rather than return to their families and rebuilding of the community. Among these men, there are no songs.

    Mizushima's conversion from soldier-musician to selfless monk symbolises a state of reflection that follows all armed conflict. The film has been criticised for failing to confront the barbarism of the Imperial army, but this lack of identification with specific national failings is what gives the film a theme that transgresses to other cultures, conflicts and evils - the coming to terms with a life to be lived in the aftermath of horror. The flaws on the Yamato spirit may not be interrogated, but the atrocities of war are present, most visibly in Mizushima's encounter with the rotting flesh of fallen comrades being picked over by scavenger birds.

    The framing is impeccable, and those looking for a quintessential Japanese aesthetic will be surprised by the extensive use of closeups. The music is spare and suitably evocative of military camaraderie and frightened young men coping far from home. Mizushima's journey is both symbolic and highly plausible, as is the reaction of his brothers-in-arms. Great cinema in its own right, and at the very top of the tree in anti-war movies.
    8mossgrymk

    the burmese harp

    Powerful, if slow moving, and relentlessly allegorical anti war film. The problem I have with allegorical works, be they movies, plays or novels, is that the characters, being more symbols than living, breathing characters with living, breathing quirks and contradictions, tend toward the stiff and humorless. And with the partial exception of the lone woman in this film, a subtly wry old crone, that is the case here.

    What redeems the film and gives it its force is director Kon Ichikawa's imagery and use of music. Aided by his cinematographer Minoru Yokoyama, Ichikawa has many shots that are arresting and that linger in the mind. The most visceral, of course, are the killing fields through which the soldier turned monk Mizushima must pass in order to attain inner peace but for me the most affecting is the shot, from behind, of Mizushima, twin parrots perched on each shoulder, playing "No Place Like Home" on the eponymous musical instrument, child acolyte by his side and Japanese prisoners, behind barbed wire, listening, one hopes attentively and not just sentimentally, to the plaintive song. Which brings me to Ichikawa's use of music, mentioned by several previous reviewers. It is brilliant in its ability to convey the themes of humanity and brotherhood that are at the heart of this eminently good hearted work. In fact, the score is so striking that at times it reminds me of a John Ford film. And where I come from that is high praise, indeed. B plus.

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    Argumento

    Editar

    ¿Sabías que...?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      Viewers familiar with Japón bajo el terror del monstruo (1954), may recognize many of the cues present in The Burmese Harp's soundtrack, as composer Akira Ifukube adapted Godzilla's requiem theme into several pieces heard throughout the film.
    • Pifias
      The modern harp (with its pedal changes and its consequent ability to make changes of harmony, in particular)that is played throughout on the film's soundtrack does not match the much more basic instrument shown in the film.
    • Citas

      Captain Inouye: [Excerpt from Mizushima's letter, which Captain Inouye reads to his men as they sail back to Japan] As I climbed mountains and crossed streams, burying the bodies left in the grasses and streams, my heart was wracked with questions. Why must the world suffer such misery? Why must there be such inexplicable pain? As the days passed, I came to understand. I realized that, in the end, the answers were not for human beings to know, that our work is simply to ease the great suffering of the world. To have the courage to face suffering, senselessness and irrationality without fear, to find the strength to create peace by one's own example. I will undergo whatever training is necessary for this to become my unshakable conviction.

    • Conexiones
      Featured in Ai no onimotsu (1955)
    • Banda sonora
      Hanyuu no Yado
      (Japanese Version of 'Home Sweet Home')

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    Preguntas frecuentes17

    • How long is The Burmese Harp?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 26 de abril de 1957 (Francia)
    • País de origen
      • Japón
    • Idiomas
      • Japonés
      • Inglés
      • Birmano
    • Títulos en diferentes países
      • El arpa de Birmania
    • Localizaciones del rodaje
      • Burma
    • Empresa productora
      • Nikkatsu
    • Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

    Editar
    • Recaudación en Estados Unidos y Canadá
      • 20.015 US$
    • Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • 4569 US$
      • 20 oct 2024
    • Recaudación en todo el mundo
      • 33.763 US$
    Ver información detallada de taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Duración
      1 hora 56 minutos
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Mono
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.37 : 1

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